Last week, I attended the Philip Morris International's Global Travel Retail Conference in Barcelona, where industry leaders and colleagues gathered to share insights on growth, leadership, and transformation. One of the highlights of the event was listening to Toni Nadal, renowned tennis coach and uncle of Rafael Nadal, deliver a keynote speech on the principles that shaped one of the greatest athletes of our time. Toni’s reflections on coaching, improvement, and feedback resonated deeply with me and inspired this blog.
![]() |
Toni Nadal delivers his keynote at the PMI Global Travel Retail Conference in Barcelona with inspiring videos — on truth, character, and the daily work of improvement |
There’s a moment in Toni Nadal’s story that lands like a forehand winner. Minutes before Rafael Nadal plays Roger Federer in Monte‑Carlo, Rafa asks his uncle and coach, “What do you think about today’s match?” Toni doesn’t reach for a motivational line. He tells the truth: Federer’s forehand is better, his backhand is better, his volleys are better. Then he adds the only thing that matters: now we can prepare the strategy to beat him, but we have to know the truth first.
That sentence could be the operating system for growth. In sport and in business, outcomes are noisy and full of variables you don’t control—market shifts, competitors, regulation, the occasional “Djokovic.” Improvement is the one goal you do own. Toni’s philosophy reduces the complex to the essential: tell the truth, choose the price, and train your character. Everything else is commentary.
![]() |
From strategy to execution, sessions emphasized controllable inputs, candid feedback, and resilience under pressure—principles echoed throughout the keynote. |
Make improvement the goal you own
Toni never set “be No. 1” as the real challenge. Rankings and trophies depend on forces outside your control. Improvement does not. In tennis, the fastest path to beating opponents is first to beat yesterday’s version of yourself. In business terms, convert outcome targets into controllable input commitments: quality and frequency of customer interactions, error‑free close percentage, on‑time filings, decision cycle time, scenario rigor. When inputs compound, outcomes follow. For every KPI, write the one behaviour you will do daily that makes it more likely. Track the behaviour, not just the number.
Feedback that builds: truth over comfort
Choose the price—and pay it
Strategy requires unblinking realism
Win today, plan for tomorrow
Don’t complicate the essentials
Character is trained in the storm
Keep brains alert: success ages quickly
![]() |
Simple rules, big outcomes: keep the ball in, place it where the opponent isn’t, and hit every shot as well as possible—every day |
A simple framework you can implement Monday: IMPROVE
I — Identify the controllable. Translate outcomes into daily inputs.
M — Map the truth. One strength and one weakness per person or process.
P — Price the climb. Write what you will trade for progress.
R — Run the plan. Execute against reality, not wishful thinking.
O — Operate with essentials. Three non‑negotiables; everything else supports.
V — Versus yesterday. Benchmark against your last best, weekly.
E — Endure by design. Add safe constraints that build resilience.
How this scales to Finance and Global Travel Retail
Treasury discipline: treat liquidity and FX exposure like “keep the ball in.” Reliability scores more than flash.
Tax and compliance: improvement equals fewer surprises, faster clarifications, tighter documentation. Celebrate zero‑drama closings.
Commercial rhythm: replace vanity metrics with movement metrics such as time to decision, time to customer answer, and time to corrective action.
Culture: adopt the visible pairing of high standards and high regard. Make it explicit that tough feedback is given for the person, not at the person.
Closing Remarks
Toni Nadal’s philosophy is a timely reminder that growth is not about chasing perfection, but about embracing the honest, sometimes uncomfortable, process of improvement. Whether on the tennis court or in the boardroom, the fundamentals remain the same: tell the truth, focus on what you can control, and build resilience through adversity.
As leaders and teams, our challenge is to create environments where feedback is valued, standards are high, and every success is treated as a stepping stone rather than a finish line. By simplifying the complex and prioritising character over comfort, we set ourselves—and those we lead—on a path to sustainable excellence.
Let’s take these lessons forward, not just as inspiration, but as a practical framework for how we work, lead, and grow together. What is your version of hitting the ball as well as possible, every day?
Hiç yorum yok:
Yorum Gönder